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Looking back at GloucestershireLive Business Awards' past winners

Here, Gloucestershire director of Business West, IAN MEAN MBE, gives his insight into the work of previous GloucestershireLive Business Awards' winner Renishaw

Renishaw New Mills headquarters (Image: Renishaw )

Gloucestershire is a great place to do business and for the last 25 years, the GloucestershireLive Business Awards have epitomised that innovation, creativity and entrepreneurship.

The awards celebrate theirwith the continuing support from lead sponsor and accountants, .

To celebrate the awards' anniversary, Gloucestershire director of Business West Ian Mean MBE has been talking to some of the past winners of the main award—Business of the Year.

, Gloucestershire’s largest private sector employer was a winner of the award in 1999.

Then the engineering giant's annual turnover was £100m, and now, in the last reported year, the turnover was £671m.

GloucestershireLive Business Awards 2023 judges, L-R: Chris Pockett, Abigail Turner, Dawn Burke, Ian Mean, Lizzie Dick, Sam Holliday, Sarah Cook, Tim Watkins, and Joseph Challinor (Image: Reach plc)

A real engineering powerhouse, Renishaw now employs 5,200 people globally with around 2,600 employed on its sites in Gloucestershire.

Chris Pockett, Renishaw’s head of communications, told me: “Winning awards like the GloucestershireLive Business of the Year is a very good thing for us because it gives the company some profile and an opportunity to flag our own success.

“I think Renishaw’s role now is very much to support the rest of the business community and encourage others.”